Archery Tactics for October Whitetails

Rattling and calling work well during the last 2 weeks of October. Choose a good site and use these sounds often and aggressively.

In the past, I never really got serious about my whitetail deer hunting until the rut. I’m definitely not alone in that regard; many bowhunters ignore the opportunities the month of October has to offer. Certainly, it’s not like September when the bucks are visible and on predictable daily routines, or November, when the bucks are running around in a testosterone-induced stupor. But October has some advantages.

Hot Weather = Fewer Hunters

One advantage to bowhunting during hot weather in early to mid-October is the solitude. Because most bowhunters are waiting for the rut – and the first few frosts to kill mosquitoes – you can have the woods to yourself. It’s a great time to hunt the public land that will be full of hunters in November, but will have few fresh boot prints in October. Save your prime private land spots for November and focus your hot-weather October hunting on public ground.

One significant advantage to hunting October is found in the fact that most hunters are not in the woods at that time. Areas that will get a lot of hunting pressure in November can be lonely places in October.

Acorns and Cut Corn

Food is always important to whitetails, and this is certainly evident as oaks begin dropping acorns. In addition, mid-October often sees crops being harvested, and cut cornfields can become magnets for the first week or so after they are harvested. After acorns are cleaned up, whitetails move into these fields to for the easy pickings. Ears of high-carbohydrate lie on the ground in plain sight and deer migrate to these areas en-masse. If you can take advantage of acorn-producing oaks and cut corn, October can be outstanding.

Rattling and Calling

By the third week in October, the effectiveness of calling and rattling is rising. Scrapes and rubs are everywhere, but not being checked often just yet; still, they are excellent places to make some noise. Setting up over early rut sign and rattling can be very effective at this time. The last two weeks of October and the first week of November are the only times when I feel that blind calling is effective enough to be worth trying. By blind calling, I mean making attracting noises without actually first spotting a buck.

Blind calling with a grunt call and rattling must be done from the right location, however. Avoid areas of open timber where the deer can see long distances. If they can see the area where the sound is coming from, but don’t see a deer, they probably won’t come. A decoy can help, but better yet, put a barrier of some sort between you and where you expect the deer to be. Even a small rise in terrain that they can’t see over can be enough to make them walk over there to investigate the source of the calling or rattling.

Focus on Sign

The success of calling and rattling continues to grow through the last week in October, but the real area of focus is fresh sign. Those scrapes that were mostly undisturbed during most of the month are suddenly getting a lot of activity. Areas all torn up with scrapes and rubs can be excellent places to park yourself in a treestand for long hours during the end of the month.

Here’s a key tip: Get downwind of the area, particularly if those scrapes are found along the edge of a field. Bucks avoid exposing themselves to open areas during the daylight, and they are unlikely to walk right up to a scrape along the edge of a field unless something really attractive hits their nose. They will often work those scrapes from 30-40 yards downwind, from the cover whenever possible for them to do so. Keep this in mind when you choose the right tree for your stand.

Using scents and lures to attract bucks is a strategy that’s at its best in October. A scrape dripper watched over by a scouting camera helps you get an inventory of the bucks in the area, plus increases your odds of bringing those bucks in during daylight.

The final week of October offers the best chance of the entire month to attract a buck with a good deer lure. I have had excellent success using a scrape dripper with some Special Golden Estrus or Active Scrape to keep fresh scent going into the scrape during daylight hours. Warm daytime weather causes the dripper to expand, making it drip scent into the scrape. Cool weather at night causes the scent to contract, pulling air back into the container where it stays until it warms up. The advantages of having fresh scent applied only during daylight are obvious.

So don’t give up on the maligned month of October. Sure this time period has some challenges, but if you focus on the advantages, you can be wrapping a tag around a buck before most hunters are getting serious about their hunting.

Images by Bernie Barringer

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